Mark Coote

Since we’re in the death throes of this Parliament, and everyone
knows there has to be a General Election by early June, it was
inevitable that the pre-election guns would be fired as soon as New
Year festivities were out of the way.

I’m very glad David Cameron seized the pre-election initiative on two counts: firstly by focusing on the NHS
and secondly by travelling to my county of Gloucestershire to engage
with local residents on local healthcare issues and other important
concerns.

I work as a Director for a well-known cancer charity and NHS
surgeons saved my life in September 1991. I have much to be grateful
for. When I most needed it, the NHS was there for me and my family.
Having spent literally months of my young adult life in NHS hospitals,
and been treated by some of the most specialist health professionals
anywhere in the world, I have been incredibly lucky. Some of the people
for whom I dedicate my working life have been less so.

Hardly surprising then that Cameron’s message that enshrines the
basic tenets of the NHS as being free at the point of use and available
to everyone based on need resonates with me with particular piquancy.
This is a cornerstone of modern Conservative philosophy and, without
any apology at all, our key and compelling priority.

But of course the NHS is far from perfect. Constant re-organisation
has sapped the innovative outlook and appetite of clinical staff.
Overbearing Department of Health target-setting has distorted clinical
priority and created dreadful healthcare inequalities. Numbers of
managers in the NHS are rising three times as fast as the number of
nurses. The postcode lottery of healthcare is well-documented, as is
the escalation of hospital-borne infections and filthy wards – often
mixed sex. Hospitals in the main might provide heroic results against
the odds, but given the public money invested in the system, the least
patients should expect is dignity, cleanliness and proper nutrition.